Day of the Longtail – Die Macht des Publikums
Day of the Longtail. The Movie.
The audience is up to something.
[via Loic Le Meur]
Day of the Longtail. The Movie.
The audience is up to something.
[via Loic Le Meur]
OCLC behandelt in seinem neuesten Newsletter NextSpace das Thema WEB 2.0 für die Bibliotheken. Ich habe mich ja schon oft zu diesem spannenden Thema geäußert (siehe zum Beispiel «Web 2.0 = Bibliothek 2.0 ?»). Tom Storey schreibt im OCLC-Newsletter unter der Überschrift «Where will the next generation Web take libraries?»:
The potential network effects of Web 2.0 have not gone unnoticed in the library community. A corresponding Library 2.0 discussion is underway, primarily in the blogosphere, about how libraries will fit into and thrive in the second coming of the Web. NextSpace asked a futurist, three librarians and an OCLC Vice President to comment on the library possibilities of Web 2.0.
Das meint zumindest Simon Willison: «A (Re)-Introduction to JavaScript».
Why a re-introduction? Because JavaScript has a reasonable claim to being the world’s most misunderstood programming language. While often derided as a toy, beneath its deceptive simplicity lie some powerful language features. The last year has seen the launch of a number of high profile JavaScript applications, showing that deeper knowledge of this technology is an important skill for any web developer.
Hört sich interessant an. Mal sehen, was dran ist… (Werd’s ein anderes mal lesen, bin jetzt zu müde.)